COVID-19 Vaccination Coverage, by Race and Ethnicity — National Immunization Survey Adult COVID Module, United States, December 2020–November 2021

Some racial and ethnic minority groups have experienced disproportionately higher rates of COVID-19-related illness and mortality (1,2). Vaccination is highly effective in preventing severe COVID-19 illness and death (3), and equitable vaccination can reduce COVID-19-related disparities. CDC analyzed data from the National Immunization Survey Adult COVID Module (NIS-ACM), a random-digit-dialed cellular telephone survey of adults aged ≥18 years, to assess disparities in COVID-19 vaccination coverage by race and ethnicity among U.S. adults during December 2020-November 2021. Asian and non-Hispanic White (White) adults had the highest ≥1-dose COVID-19 vaccination coverage by the end of April 2021 (69.6% and 59.0%, respectively); ≥1-dose coverage was lower among Hispanic (47.3%), non-Hispanic Black or African American (Black) (46.3%), Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander (NH/OPI) (45.9%), multiple or other race (42.6%), and American Indian or Alaska Native (AI/AN) (38.7%) adults. By the end of November 2021, national ≥1-dose COVID-19 vaccination coverage was similar for Black (78.2%), Hispanic (81.3%), NH/OPI (75.7%), and White adults (78.7%); however, coverage remained lower for AI/AN (61.8%) and multiple or other race (68.0%) adults. Booster doses of COVID-19 vaccine are now recommended for all adults (4), but disparities in booster dose coverage among the fully vaccinated have become apparent (5). Tailored efforts including community partnerships and trusted sources of information could be used to increase vaccination coverage among the groups with identified persistent disparities and can help achieve vaccination equity and prevent new disparities by race and ethnicity in booster dose coverage.

are weighted to represent the noninstitutionalized U.S. adult population and calibrated to state-level vaccine administration data reported to CDC. † Survey respondents who reported their race and ethnicity § and whether they received ≥1 dose of COVID-19 vaccine ¶ (516,190) during April 22-December 31, 2021, were included; race and ethnicity was reported for 97.1% of respondents. First-dose vaccination month and year were imputed for 4.9% of persons who reported they received vaccination but did not report their month and year of vaccination, using hot deck imputation (replacing missing values with observed values from a respondent with similar characteristics) from donor pools matched for month of interview, age group, region, and race and ethnicity. Monthly survey response rates ranged from 17.2% to 23.4% (average = 20.6%).** The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis procedure was used, with vaccination month as the time-to-event variable, to estimate the cumulative percentage of persons vaccinated by the end of each month during December 2020-November 2021. † † Differences in ≥1-dose COVID-19 vaccination coverage were assessed † Survey weights were calibrated to the COVID-19 vaccine administration data by jurisdiction, age group, and sex. https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/ (Accessed May 26, 2022). § Race and ethnicity were assessed by the following two questions: "Are you of Hispanic or Latino origin?" and "Now, I am going to read a list of categories. Please choose one or more of the following categories to describe your race. Are you White, Black or African American, American Indian, Alaska Native, Asian, Native Hawaiian or other Pacific Islander?" Persons were categorized into mutually exclusive categories of race and ethnicity; persons who did not identify as Hispanic were categorized by their reported race or races. For persons reporting they were Asian, Black, or Hispanic, an additional question was asked to determine a more specific ethnic or racial group. ¶ Receipt of ≥1 dose of COVID-19 vaccine was assessed by the question, "Have you received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine?" Month and year of first dose was assessed by the question, "During what month and year did you receive your first COVID-19 vaccine?" Respondents who were interviewed during April 22-December 31, 2021, were included in this study; month and year of vaccination could be before the study period. ** Calculated according to the American Association for Public Opinion Research type 3 response rate. https://www.aapor.org/AAPOR_Main/media/ publications/Standard-Definitions20169theditionfinal.pdf † † Kaplan-Meier methods were used to calculate cumulative monthly vaccination estimates during December 2020-November 2021. Vaccination status was assigned using the reported month and year of the first dose of COVID-19 vaccine, as of the end of the month before interview. by race and ethnicity and stratified by U.S. Census Bureau region, § § urbanicity, ¶ ¶ age group, annual household income, and health insurance status. T-tests were used to determine differences among groups, with p<0.05 considered statistically significant. Analyses were conducted using SAS (version 9.4; SAS Institute) and SUDAAN (version 11; RTI International). This activity was reviewed by CDC and was conducted consistent with applicable federal law and CDC policy.*** By the end of April 2021, when all U.S. adults were eligible to receive COVID-19 vaccine, vaccination coverage was highest among adults who were Asian (69.6%) or White (59.0%), and lower among those who were Hispanic (47.3%), Black (46.3%), NH/OPI (45.9%), multiple or other race (42.6%), or AI/AN (38.7%) (Figure). Differences in coverage among these racial and ethnic groups compared with that in White adults peaked during March-May 2021, after which disparities began to diminish ( Figure). By the end of November 2021, differences in vaccination coverage were no longer statistically significant among Black and NH/OPI adults (difference = −0.5 and −3.0 percentage points, respectively), compared with coverage among White adults (Table 1). Vaccination coverage among Hispanic and Asian adults was higher than coverage among White adults (difference = 2.6 and 16.5 percentage points, respectively), whereas coverage remained lower among AI/AN (difference = −16.9) and multiple or other race (difference = −10.7) adults.
In analyses stratified by Census region, urbanicity, age, annual household income, and health insurance, similar racial and ethnic patterns emerged in most sociodemographic strata (Supplementary Figure, Table 2). Among Hispanic adults, coverage ranged from 90.6% among persons identifying as South American, to 79.3% among those identifying as Mexican. Coverage among Black adults was similar across subgroups (range = 73.6%-79.8%), with the exception of adults identifying as Somali (coverage = 52.6%).

Discussion
During December 2020-November 2021, disparities in COVID-19 vaccination coverage among minority racial and ethnic groups narrowed. Disparities in COVID-19 ageadjusted mortality rates decreased during 2020-2021 for most racial and ethnic groups in the United States (6), likely related to reduced disparities in vaccination-related protection from COVID-19 infection. Substantial programmatic efforts to provide equitable access to COVID-19 vaccines might have contributed to closing the coverage gap. COVID-19 vaccines were made available free of charge at various providers and locations, including pharmacies, mass vaccination clinics, hospitals, and federally qualified health centers. CDC awarded supplemental funding to U.S. jurisdictions and other national, state, local, and community-level partner organizations to support efforts to increase coverage equity and access to vaccines, particularly among populations disproportionately affected by COVID-19, including racial and ethnic minority adults. † † † Differences in coverage by race and ethnicity within high and low socioeconomic strata suggest additional factors beyond access that led to disparities in vaccination. Although Hispanic adults were slower to be vaccinated, by the end of November 2021, this group had significantly higher coverage than did White adults across almost all categories assessed. Among adults who were uninsured or below the poverty level, COVID-19 vaccination coverage among Hispanic adults was >15 percentage points higher than that among White adults, suggesting that access issues typically associated with lower socioeconomic status were not necessarily barriers to vaccination among all racial and ethnic groups. Reported difficulty obtaining vaccine did not differ between Hispanic and White adults who were   or below the poverty level; however, White adults in these groups reported more vaccine hesitancy, with approximately three times as many persons saying they definitely or probably would not get vaccinated (7).
As of October 31-December 31, 2021, 6.2% of White adults still intended to get vaccinated; among racial and ethnic minority groups, intent to get vaccinated was higher among NH/OPI (12.8%), Black (11.2%), AI/AN (10.3%), and Hispanic adults (9.3%) § § § (7), indicating the potential for coverage to continue to increase among these groups. Analysis § § § Those who said they would "definitely get a vaccine," "probably get a vaccine," or were "not sure" were considered to have intent to get vaccinated.
of the behavioral and social drivers of COVID-19 vaccination among those who were still unvaccinated, but willing to get vaccinated, during October 31-December 31, 2021, indicates that large proportions of AI/AN, Black, and multiple and other race adults are concerned about getting COVID-19 and think the vaccine is important and safe, yet they remain unvaccinated. For example, in the groups with continuing disparities (those in the Midwest and urban areas, and adults aged 18-29 years), fewer Black and Hispanic than White adults reported that they definitely or probably will not get vaccinated, indicating potential for increases in coverage among these groups with the appropriate interventions. increased occupational exposure risk because they were essential or frontline workers (8).
The findings in this report are subject to at least five limitations. First, response rates for NIS-ACM were relatively low (<25%), although similar to those in other NIS surveys. ¶ ¶ ¶ Data were weighted to mitigate possible bias resulting from incomplete sample frame (i.e., exclusion of households with no phone service or only landline telephones) or nonresponse, but some selection bias might persist. Second, all responses were self-reported; vaccination receipt, and month and year of receipt of first dose might be subject to recall or social desirability bias. Third, the survey sampled noninstitutionalized U.S. adults; therefore, adults who were incarcerated or nursing home residents might not be represented in the sample. Fourth, although survey weights were calibrated to state-level vaccine administration data reported on CDC, NIS-ACM estimates of vaccination coverage might differ from vaccine administration data reported to CDC's COVID Data Tracker.**** Finally, race and ethnicity information was missing for 2.9% of NIS-ACM respondents, compared with approximately 25% of vaccine administration records † † † † ; coverage estimates for certain racial and ethnic groups might differ between the two sources because of differential omission of race and ethnicity information.
Equitable access to and receipt of COVID-19 vaccination is critical to reducing persistent disparities in vaccination ¶ ¶ ¶ https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/imz-managers/nis/data-tables.html **** https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccinations_vacc-total-adminrate-total (Accessed May 26, 2022). † † † † https://covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tracker/#vaccination-demographic (Accessed May 26, 2022). * Kaplan-Meier survival analysis was used to estimate vaccination coverage based on the month and year of first dose receipt; estimates reflect the cumulative percentage vaccinated as of the end of each month. † Persons were categorized into mutually exclusive categories of race and ethnicity; persons who did not identify as Hispanic were categorized by their reported race or races. For persons reporting they were Asian, Black, or Hispanic, an additional question was asked to determine a more specific ethnic or racial group.
coverage, morbidity, and mortality by race and ethnicity (9). Booster doses of COVID-19 vaccine are now recommended for all adults to boost immunity and improve protection against COVID-19 (4). Disparities in booster dose coverage among the fully vaccinated are becoming apparent (5), and the strategies that were successful in reducing disparities in primary dose COVID-19 vaccination could be applied to ensure equitable booster dose coverage. Tailored efforts including community partnerships and trusted sources of information could be used to increase vaccination coverage among the groups with identified persistent disparities and can help achieve vaccination equity and prevent new disparities by race and ethnicity in booster dose coverage.